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Re: [RC] trot/canter - mkrumlaw

Because you are using the visual guide of the trail to aid the horse in 
the direction, transition, and correct diagonal/lead.  He can see where 
he's supposed to go and the direction he's supposed to bend.  

To correctly *ride* the horse he should be on *your* aids not the 
trails.  Meaning you are using your legs, seat, and reins to communicate 
where you want the horse to be, how fast you want him to be going, and in 
what frame.  When you're in a flat dressage ring there are no visual 
barriers to guide the horse.  It's all rider.

As I said, it's not as easy as it looks.

MKS


So how does the ring differ from the trail other than mindset of the 
rider?  If you do
circles in the ring working on certain things, why can you do that by 
doing circles in a
field that you find while out riding on the trail?  If you are coming up 
on a section of
trail that snakes to the right and then snakes to the left, you can 
practice a lead change
there.  How is that different than asking for a lead change during a 
figure 8 in the ring?

   
  My husband and I often do training rides.  During those training 
rides, we will ask for
collection, we will do lead changes, work on extending trots, collected 
canters taking off
with different leads, counter canters, and such.  I guess I don't 
understand how doing it
in a 70 x 140 sand ring is so different than asking for the same things 
out on the trail.
   
  Carolyn Burgess

Truman Prevatt <tprevatt@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
  Carolyn Burgess wrote:

I have to disagree with this. Now, if you talking about going out for 
a "hack", then yes, I concur. I am one of those riders who can't 
stand going around in circles in the ring. I'll be up in the ring 
working away, thinking I've been there for a LONG time and I'll look 
at my watch and 5 minutes has elapsed. Five torturous minutes. I 
will only work in the ring if it is a safely issue. I do all of my 
training on the trail. I do dressage work on the trail, I do lead 
changes, bending, gait changes, anything you can do in the ring, I do 
on the trail. It also teaches them that just because we are doing a 
ride, doesn't mean that I won't ask for collection, lead changes, 
different diagonals, etc.

Carolyn Burgess

*/mkrumlaw@xxxxxxxxxxxx/* wrote:

I don't believe you should use the trail to *teach* your horse the
correct leads and diagonals. 

I'm not a big fan of the ring either. However, I think most horse can 
benefit from some good ring work and most horse can benefit from going 
back into the ring every once in awhile for a refresher.

A baseball player learns to hit a fastball by slowly turning up the 
speed on the pitching machine. He doesn't learn to hit it walking out 
and facing Nolan Ryan's 100 mph fast ball on the day one. I think the 
same concept works for the horse.

Truman

-- 

"It has become appallingly obvious that our technology has exceeded our 
humanity."

- Albert Einstein



  


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